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Page 15 text:
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DAVID WOLENEC real selfrnade man. Yes, and ty well satisfied with his maker. dent Council 3,45 Dodger Co- tor4g F.F.A. l.2,3g F.F.A. Vice- iident 33 Class President 2. Mlnlelligent. thoughtful. and willy. Band 12.3.41 Chorus l,2.3,4-1 Girls' Vocal Ensembles l.2.3,4g Majorette 2,331-1 Dramatics Club lg Three-Act Play 1.33 Forensics l,2,3,4g Cheer- leader l,2,3,4g Student Council 2,3, 41 Student Council Vice-Pres. 3g Student Council Sec.-Treas. 43 Dodger Co-Editor 41 Dodger High- life Co-Art Editor 43 Spanish Club 2,3g Spanish Club Treas. 2. ALETHA TRACE lf laughing makes a longer life, she'll never die, Clee Club l,2,3,4g Glee Club Presi- dent 44 G.A.A. 1,2,3,4g Homecoming Court of Honor 45 Librarian 3.4, Li- brarian Couneil 4. Senior Class Officers WILBUR ZEMLICKA ffl everjind love, I'll analyze it in a test lube. Basketball 1,25 Football 1,2,3,4g Baseball 2.3.43 Track lg Lette-rmen's Club 3,43 Class Vice-President 23 Class Treasurer 3. SEATED: Dianna Tarrence, student council representativeg Bonnie Heibel, student council repre- sentative: Clara Morton, treasure-rg Marcella Frolik, president: Gwendolyn Ralph, vice-presidentg Mary Lou Ruppert, secretary. STANDING: David Wolenec, student council representativeg Robert Craetz, advisor, M. A. Fischer, advisor: Wilbur Zemlicka, historian.
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Page 14 text:
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ll1lNNll'l llUS5lNll Rullwr lull. und hair of light hrozrn llvr rnnnx moods don'I krwp her dou'n. KL .-.- Cluly lgljl.-1-1 Girls' Vue-ul lin- 44'Illlll1' fl: fQ.A,A. l.1l.fl.'l: l.ilu'arian fl:'lll1u-1-fM'tPlan fl. JOHN SClIl,l.lON lumix 1l'lIlllflPllfvYI'lIfS qfhigh srhoal I1ll1'l'llllllPlf,llPI7l0fP would have ruined nw. ClllYFllS-1-Qlllli5S Pr:-si1lc'nI3. GWICNDOLYN RALPH My intvrfnvl is in tlwfulurv berrzzzsf' l mpf'r'1 lo spvml ilu' rm! Qflllltl' life lIH'ff'.u llaml 12.3.4-L lll1orl1s3.4gCl4'f' Cluh lg fl.A.A, I.2.3.41Dmlgf-r Highlife Assistant llusins-ss lVlanag1-r 4: llmm-4-outing Court of Honor fl: Class Tr:-asurrr 2: Class Vim'f'-Prf-si- ulvul 4. .lAlVll'iS REUTHR LMP is interesting: but 1'd rathffr sleep. l'.l'.A. fl. Trauslc-rre-ll from lthava lligh S1'l'uml. MARY LUU RUPPICRT FFHIIIIIIQ'-gli-lilPk-Y andfrefi Nothing :wists llml lmlhers mv. Cl:-Q' llluh l.2.fl.4: Dralnativs Cluh l1Stufl4-ntCot1lu'il'l1G.A.A. l.2.fl.4l l-lmlgvr llighlilc' Gossip C0-Editor 41l'lUIlIf'4'llI1llllgiltlllfllll-l l0l10I' 23 Class Svvrvtary 4. ROBERT RUl Pl'lRT Laugh and I'll laugh with you. Study and you study alone. Foothall 3.4: Travk 2.3.41 lwtlvr- IIIPl1'SClllll4-lF.F.A. l.2.3,4. IVAN SITTIC The more Isee of women. the more I like cats. Football l,2,3,4-L Track 3.44 Letter- mPn's Club 3.4. CAROL SKARE The harder I trv lo be 'gonderf the Fworser' Igetf' Clee Club 43 Forensics 43 G.A,A. 4-, Entered from Black River Falls High School. .lllVl ,IO Rl7Nlll.l'l '.Thl'fl' ore' lllrrr' gff'Ill rnrn in I world. Me' and l.I'f'-fllVglIl'I'lI l o1lu'rluXn. Chorus l.2.fl.-la lloxs' lluuhh- Qu If-1 1.2.3513 Tllwv-A1-l Plan lj l urn'nsi1'S l.ll: Slllllt'Ill llouuvil I 4: Sluclvul Cmnwil l,l'4'5.'l'lSlllll1 llUllllt'll Puhlivitv llllillflllilll fl: l u hall l.2.2l.4g Truvk Il: l,e-tlvrmv Club 12.25.41 llmm-vomiug Cu-Ki 4: Baskvthall Manage-r lg llauh Boys' Stale' 3. gi Sl'llRl.l'lY Sl'lVl'lRSllN Charming, .v14'f'f'l. and nlu rival. Clvc Cluh l.2,fl,4g Ulf-1' lfluh V Pr:-Sidcnt flg C.A,A. 1.2.3,-tg llu Corning Court of l lnnor 2,
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Page 16 text:
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PROPHECY Howdy Pardners! The signs show that we have entered the great Lone Star State of Texas. It is the year 1980. We are driving through Texas to locate our classmates of 1956, who we hear have settled in this great state. We find DAVID BUSKEE in Amarillo, working hard on his famous Bean Plantation. It is small now-only 3,000 acres-but he hopes it will grow. Traveling west to Abilene, we find JOAN DAHLER married to her engineering husband, Jack, and raising a Texas family. Here NORBERT DAY finally popped the question to MARCELLA FROLIK and they are now living on Norb's 1,000 acre oil ranch. On the side, he raises cattle and Marce raises children. Arriving at Austin, we locate two of our classmates who are engaged in government jobs: ALBERT PRAZAK, Secretary of Agricul- ture, and his private secretary, Miss ALETHA TRACEQ and GARY DICKINSON, Indian Inspector for the Comanche Reservations. An- other of our friends who has found employment here is TOM ESCH, the co-owner of the Buick-Special Corporation, who plans on buying out the Chrysler Corporation. In Dallas, we find ROLAND CHRISTEN-still working in an IGA store. Next door is the Dallas Opera House which is currently starring BARBARA CULLEN. Also near by can be found MUCK MARTIN'S Wet Your Whistle Casino. Bill has become a very famous businessman and his right-hand man is IVAN Bouncer SITTIG. Much of his suc- cess may be credited to two of the lively members of his kick chorus, JOAN HARRIS and BEVERLY PENFIELD. Do you remember JIM RUNDLE? He now owns a chain of live and ten cent stores throughout Texas, with headquarters in Dallas. Walking past the candy counter in one of his stores, we see MARGARIETTE JOHNSTON demonstrating for the Goody Goody Candy Company. She tells us she does short distance channel swimming to keep in shape. Ten stories up in the same store, BEVERLY HILDRETH and SHIRLEY SEVERSON have become magnificent models. Their salary is Texas style-3500 a day. Leaving Dallas, we discover along the highway the You Name It, We Got lt ranch, just opened by JERRY HALVERSON and MARTIN LENZ. CI' hey sell everything from prize Brahma bulls to Banty roosters.J Further down the road, JOE MIESS, who was always noted for doing things differently, is now trying to dig his way to China through Texas. tHe thinks the soil is softer.J Next to this super-human exhibition is JIM REUTER'S Riding Academy. With his own Arabians, he is a star polo player at the famous Polo Grounds. With an eye on the fuel gauge, we head for the nearest city, Hous- ton. After replenishing our gas tank, we stop at a newsstand to catch up on the latest. The latest happens to be found in the Houston Scan- dal, edited by ROGER KRAMER, who knows all the gossip around town. Our eye is caught by the news that BONNIE ROSSIN G has taken over the writing of True Romance. They say her stories are from tme experiences. Another Bonnie in the news is BONNIE HEIBEL, a mem- ber of the Texas F.B.I. She cracked her last case by using her low voice and disguising herself as a man. Turning to the financial page, we see that the great economist, JOHN HUSUM, has iust perfected a model four-hour working day with higher pay for Texas businessmen-only. On the same page are the reports of the stock market, which is con- trolled in Texas by multi-millionaire, LE ROY GRUNENWALD. Climbing back into our car after the brief rest, we snap on the radio. We are delighted to hear the voice of.IIM JACKSON, great announcer and disk jockey of station T E X A S. While listening to his program, we find that two of the latest hits in the song world are, The Pink Rose of Texas and Jeannie With the Light Red Hair, written by the famous composer, BILL PERKINS. Just as we are about to switch off the radio, we hear Jim mention the names of two more of our former classmates, CARLA MORTON and GWEN RALPH. Listening intently, we hear they are running an all-day nursery. fLater we find their only trouble is separating their children from the others.J Growing tired of listening to the radio, we finally turn it oil' and once again glance out the window. We see a sign pointing to the Texas Atomic Testing Project which reminds us of that boy from Dodgeville High, BOB RUPPERT, who loved to eat and is now an atomic food tester. He has been here since graduation and weighs 350 pounds. This talk of science reminds us of WILBUR ZEMLICKA'S fund-raising campaign to reconstruct the lab he blew up last June. fWilbur is a professor of chemistry and physics-for the cause of science, of course.J Motoring toward the border and San Antonio, we pass through Gardendale, home of MARY LOU RUPPERT, famous woman wrest- ler, who works under the name of Meat Cleaver Lou. Believe it or iot, that blood-thirsty gal, SHARON NELSON, is her manager! Outside the city of San Antonio, huge billboards display the coming attraction, Crooked Crockett to be shown at the Tex Theater. The hero of this cinema is JACK SCULLION, the great Don Juan of Texas, and his leading lady is-queen of our high school prom, BETTY LADD. An- other star in this movie is NORBERT MEUER, stuntman, whose usual specialty is being thrown from a seventy-story building as a stand-in for Frankenstein. Another talented figure in the limelight is BARBARA PENBER- THY, one of the greatest Broadway directors of the day. Her latest hit, Deepest Africa, a follow-up of that great smash Congo Land back in 1954, is competing for the audiences of San Antonio. While stopping for a red light, we hear the sound of an airplane zooming overhead. Looking up, we see it is advertising DONALD GlLBERTSON'S airplane company. He flies nothing except precious jewels and beautiful girls since his switch from motor bikes to planes. One other person who has taken to the air is HELEN BRAY, airline hostess for the Lone Star Airlines. The light changes and we drive on, only to be stopped by an enort mous crowd gathered around a drug store. A young man running by our car tells us that the noted lipstick saleswoman, CAROL SKARE, is giv- ing free demonstrations. Standing by in case of casualty is Dr. DIANNA TARRENCE, woman physician and surgeon. Next to her is DAVID WOLENEC, the friendly undertaker of San Antonio, who takes care of all those she fails to cure. Also, he has all of the measurements of his former classmates and his claim is that he will give them special rates. After seeing the sights of Texas, we again take to the road-the road that leads back to Dodgeville. The trip through Texas has been fun and leaving it and our old friends is sad. But our own jobs await us, and with this in mind, we say, Adios.
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